The Intercollegiate Tennis Association ranks 75 NCAA women's Division I teams, and William and Mary is not one of them.

The way the Tribe is competing under first-year coach Tyler Thomson, though, W&M soon figures to be on the list. The only question is how high.

In the first of two indoor matches in the Boston area, W&M (4-1) won 5-2 Friday at No. 71 Harvard. The victory was a good follow-up to the Tribe's dramatic Tuesday triumph at McCormack-Nagelsen Center, where W&M needed to win the last four singles matches on the court to beat No. 19 Ole Miss 4-3 -- and did so.

Yates, ranked fifth nationally at 165 pounds, was joined in the Hokies' winners' circle by sixth-ranked Nick Brascetta (149), No. 7 Jesse Dong (157) and David Marone (285), all of whom will be No. 1 seeds in the ACC championships.

Jarrod Garnett, at 125, scored a 9-1 major decision. ...

Old Dominion held off Binghamton 21-18 at Constant Center, taking a 21-6 lead and surviving a host of late bout victories by the visitors.

Binghamton won the last four bouts, but only got three points for each triumph.

Men’s tennis:

On the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Kickoff Weekend, which uses 15 four-team regionals to determine the field for the national indoor championships, No. 1 Virginia beat No. 63 North Florida 9-0 in the first round for the right to meet No. 55 Arkansas, which ousted No. 62 Georgia State 4-2.

Two of U.Va.'s eight singles winners under a modified format included Alex Domijan, ranked second nationally, and Jarmere Jenkins, ranked fourth. ...